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Firefux

Tuesday, June 17, 2008 at 2:48 pm

The Firefox (Mozilla) team wanted to break the Guiness World Record for the most downloads in a 24 hours period for its new Firefox 3.0 browser. Although it seems that 9 minutes after placing the precious package on their Website, it went down. Oops.

I just received an email from Firefox to tell me to go get the software. The link they provided me directs me to a page where it says “Download Firefox 3.0″, but just below, the version no. is still 2.0.0.14.

I think the PR team never really consulted the technical team as to how many people they could handle downloading at the same time. Also, I think they never tested their Website modifications before they went online, because their links are bogus.

They might make an excellent browser, but they certainly also succeed at making fools of themselves! :)

Update: the links are now all fixed… it’s downloading!

brem

Posted in Commentary, Bits & Bytes | Comments (2)

Urban Japan in HD photo

Thursday, January 17, 2008 at 4:08 pm

japan hd

Impressive snapshops of urban Japanese landscapes using high dynamic range.

They really look as if they were computer generated… They also have that Japanese anime look, don’t you find?

Click on the picture to admire them.

brem


via Pink Tentacle

Posted in Photography, Asia Mania, Commentary, Bits & Bytes, brem approved, Rant | Comments (2)

Programming is like building planes… in the air.

Tuesday, January 9, 2007 at 12:06 am


Programming is like building planes… in the air.

Or like building a monument like the Sydney opera house, every time.

It can seem pompous, boasting, but this video so hits the nail on the head. A programmer, it’s an artist of logic.

brem approved.


Posted in Viral video, Bits & Bytes, brem approved | Be the first to share your opinion.

Some thoughts about Web 2.0

Friday, November 24, 2006 at 2:02 am

puzzled
I’ve been wanting to write about Web 2.0 for a while, but by lack of motivation and because others already talk about it and that these discussions often become bitter, I had avoided the topic until now on this blog. However, I have been involved in commenting on many other bloggers’ blogs.

For those who didn’t follow the debate and for those of you new to the concept of the Web 2.0, here’s O’Reilly’s explanation of what it is.

Recently, following an article by Philippe Martin on his blog N’ayez pas peur, I was expressing that I thought that in essence, the source of the dispute between the camp of those for and those against Web 2.0 was a semantic matter. Indeed, there are no rigourous definitions of what is Web 2.0, and since everybody is making up its own mind and forging their own definition, we couldn’t possibly agree.

Michel Leblanc, who strongly believes and promotes the thesis in favour of Web 2.0 wrote an article entitled Pourquoi nommer le Web 2.0? (Why naming Web 2.0) which sort of answers this question. Essentially, his arguments add up with mine. He explains that humans need to name things and that each culture and sub-culture has their own interpretation about things. Truth is in the eye of the beholder, like they say.

Then, there is a certain malaise with the choice of the name. The name “Web 2.0″ is reminescent of the way software companies label they software, by adding a version number. However, when we leap from a major version (1.0) to another (2.0), it is usally done so that a significant evolution is marked, or to show that a software no longer has backward compatibility. The only other reason for which it is done is purely marketing, to give the illusion to the consumer that a piece of software is new and thus giving an excuse to upgrade, whereas sometimes only aesthetics fix-ups have been made. Here, we’re talking about the Web, a more abstract concept than a software, and by placing the label “2.0″, we imply implicitly that there was once a Web 1.0. Unfortunatly, for certain people in the Web business and for some programmers, coders, geeks, they never perceived such a clear cut between the 1.0 and the 2.0 era.

We still can’t deny the fact that there was at the end of the 90s a strong growth in on-line business. It was the dot-com craze. Everybody wanted to repeat the success of Amazon. High tech stock funds were skyrocketing with unprecedented level of performance. NASDAQ was becoming an important player alongside other stock markets.

Then, it crashed. Dot-coms went bankrupt, add to that the Nortel scandal and the confidence, or over-confidence became distrust. Many investors lost. Huge amounts. They had bet on immature technologies. Myself included, by proxy, with my savings in the mutual funds I owned. The bubble exploded. The 1.0 bubble.

Is this event the line between Web 1.0 and the Web 2.0 era? If so, then this wording is essentially economical.

money makerWhich brings me to admit, after some thinking, that this is not simply a semantic problem. The other side of the problem is the web 2.0 marketing.

Indeed, we can’t deny either that there is currently a ressurgeance in companies who launch Web products since about 3 years. Blogs are exploding, there is a new one every so often, there is an almost virgin market to be exploited.

Where I feel there is something rotten is that some people try to use the hype 2.0 to try to get rich. I’m a capitalist, I have absolutely nothing against the fact of becoming richer. If you have a million to spare, feel totally free to chuck it my way. :) But what ticks me off is the way Web 2.0 is used to sell almost anything. We sometime have the impression that they sell completely useless things.

This wouldn’t be the first time either. I will give some concrete examples of useless products that a lot of people bought like headless chickens:

ISO 9001 Certification (and others)

Why get ISO 9001 certified? Essentially, to do like everyone else, not to have a competitive disadvantage. Because in fact, all the ISO certification system is smoke. Suffice to know that the company pays a consulting firm (big money) to get certified. In other words, you give bribe money to the judge that will plead your case. Not a very transparent concept. Then, the certification only standardises the process, not its efficiency. So what’s the use to have a customer service protocol if it is utterly inefficient, but still standard? Among other things, to obtain contracts from the government, who puts this condition in order to get the contracts. Pretty corrupt, eh?

quakr 2.0ats
My favourite example:

Year 2000 bug

How many millions have been spent to fix this date problem that didn’t really exist? Some companies became huge by making money using the fear of people. Ask any honest computer scientist, programmer, coder, engineer, and they’ll tell you that none of them really believed the doomsday scenarios making the headlines of television and newspapers. Why didn’t we say so then? Because people prefer to hear about doomsday scenarios, it sells much better, and frankly, I think some journalists were naive enough and started to believe it. I’m almost surprised that no lawsuits for false representation towards these profiteering companies has been launched. I think these companies prefer to bury the topic since they got duped. When you get duped, you prefer to keep it quiet, because of pride. Or, maybe there are still some people that believe they made a good investment. Who knows..

So is Web 2.0 just wind? Is it a bubble about to pop, like the 1.0 bubble?

What do I know, but why do I sometimes am under the impression that someone is trying to sell me oatmeal in a new package?

brem


Posted in Commentary, Bits & Bytes, Site | Comments (9)

Top Québec Blogs

Wednesday, November 1, 2006 at 5:21 pm

Houssein of Hou-Hou Blog subjected himself to an interesting exercise, he ranked the top Quebec blogs, according to the backlinks of each, as given by Technorati.

According to his results, brem experience is in 25th place. Not too shabby for a year and a half old blog.

However, to be honest, we have to put these results into perspective.

First and foremost, it is not easy to classify blogs according to geography features, because Internet doesn’t have its own geography. Thus we try to categorise people, but nothing is obvious, just like in real life. Indeed, a French blogger living in San-Francisco: is his blog French even though it is hosted on American soil?

Furthermore, for the Quebec blogs, it’s that much more complicated because some will argue that to be a Quebec blog, it must have some French content, whereas I would personally be more inclusive in my definition.

So like I was saying, Houssein dressed a list of the Quebec French blogs he was aware of or that he had found using the available search tools, but since there is a huge amount of blogs being created every minute, this list is bound to be non-exhaustive.

Another important thing to keep in mind is that he used only one metric: the backlinks to a blog as given by Technorati. Even though Technorati is the reference of blog indexing, this tool is not accurate to measure blog notoriety because it can only measure the degree of popularity of a blog towards other bloggers. Indeed, in order for Technorati to take a link into account, another Web site or blogger has to put a link towards the blog to be accounted for. This is thus not an accurate measure of the popularity of a blog towards the general population.

What should we add or modify in order for the classification to be a more accurate measure of a popularity of a blog?

That’s a 1000$ question nowadays. Even American and english-speaking blogs have yet to find a way to measure popularity in an efficient way. By adding geographical constraints, we certainly don’t make it any easier.

Some have tried to make their results more credible by incorporating results from different sources and combine the data using a home-made algorithm, but that’s rather arbitrary.

The sources for these data could be taken from: Alexa, which allows a measure of relative traffic, the Google PageRank, which gives another measure of backlinking, RSS aggregator Web sites such as Bloglines, etc.

Unfortunatly, I do not believe that we will one day be able to compare data in a just and equitable manner. In the meantime, we’ll have to savour our little personal victories. :)

The exercise is however not futile. It has enabled us to confirm that the Quebec blogosphere is acting the same way as the rest of the blogosphere, i.e. the more a blog is popular, the more the links towards it, in an exponential way.

Also, by adding data about big Canadian / Québec medias, it has enabled us to compare the relative importance of the citizen media (blogs).

Even though the big medias have a big score, they still make up for only about 20% of the medias. On the other hand, blogs and other citizen medias, by their sheer number make up the other 80% of the medias (Pareto Power Law). The long tail made up by the blogs is still small because there is not a enough blogs to be a threat to bigger medias, but for how long?

We can already notice that the taxidenuit.blogspot.com blog by Pierre-Léon leaves LaPresseAffaires.com and also lcn.canoe.com behind. Not bad for a “simple” cab driver!

medias vs blogues quebecois
Nb. of backlinks: Medias vs. Quebec French Blogs


brem


Posted in Bits & Bytes, Site | Comments (6)